Home :: Commemorative Coins :: Commemoratives (1982 - Date) :: Louis Braille Silver Dollar (2009)

Louis Braille Silver Dollar (2009)

Louis Braille Silver Dollar (2009)
SKU
CM1-2009P-LB-Prf
Weight
4.35 oz
Our price:
$31.70
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The United States Mint issued the 2009 Louis Braille Silver Dollar to commemorate the 200th anniversary of his birth. Louis Braille is the inventor of the Braille system of reading and writing for the blind and visually impaired. The silver dollar contained the first readable Braille characters to appear on a legal tender United States coin.

The obverse of the coin features a portrait of Louis Braille. The inscriptions read "Liberty", "In God We Trust", "Louis Braille", and the bicentennial dates "1809" and "2009".

The reverse features an image of a child reading a Braille book with a bookcase in the background bearing the word "Independence". Inscriptions read "United States of America", "E Pluribus Unum", and "One Dollar". The field above the image includes the word "Braille" (abbreviated "BRL") in Braille characters. Although Braille characters have appeared on previous US coins, this is the first time the characters appear large enough to be readable by touch.

Both the proof and uncirculated versions of the coin were produced at the Philadelphia Mint. Coins were sold individually, with an easy open capsule available for the uncirculated version. The Braille Education Set included the uncirculated version of the coin, educational material about the Braille System, and examples of readable Braille.

Mintage:

P Uncirculated P Proof
82,639 135,235

Weight: 26.7300 g
Composition: 90% Silver (0.7736 ounces of silver)
Diameter: 38.1 mm